Tag: BIG

  • MAXI HUGHES reflects on a big win in Nottingham… what's next for the main man?

    MAXI HUGHES reflects on a big win in Nottingham… what's next for the main man?



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  • BIG BAD KNOCK-OUT | Cheavon Clarke TKOs Marcos Nicolas Karalitzky

    BIG BAD KNOCK-OUT | Cheavon Clarke TKOs Marcos Nicolas Karalitzky



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  • 'A Big Opportunity' – Cris Cyborg On Boxing Debut, Taylor Talks & More

    'A Big Opportunity' – Cris Cyborg On Boxing Debut, Taylor Talks & More



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  • 'THE BIG TICKET' ARNOLD OBODAI SETTLING IN AT CRUISERWEIGHT AFTER COMFORTABLE POINTS WIN

    'THE BIG TICKET' ARNOLD OBODAI SETTLING IN AT CRUISERWEIGHT AFTER COMFORTABLE POINTS WIN



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  • Joey Spencer, Ra’eese Aleem Shine On The Big Stage

    Joey Spencer, Ra’eese Aleem Shine On The Big Stage


    Spencer proves he’s a force in the 154-pound division as he cruises past Kevin Salgado on FOX while super bantam Aleem moves one step closer to a world title with a dominant win over Mike Plania on FS1.

    It’s easy to forget Joey Spencer is 22 years old. It’s as if the talented super welterweight from Grand Blanc, Michigan, has been around forever, since he turned pro a month before his 18th birthday in February 2018.

    Undefeated Kevin Salgado was supposed to pose the biggest threat of Spencer’s young career.

    Spencer short-circuited those thoughts by going 10 rounds for the first time in a thorough victory over Salgado Sunday night on the Andy Ruiz-Luis Ortiz card in a  FOX PBC Fight Night headliner from the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.

    Spencer (16-0, 10 KOs) won by unanimous scores of 99-91 (twice) and a 100-90 shutout. He controlled the fight using distance and a solid right hand that Salgado (14-1-1, 9 KOs) did not see the entire fight.

    “I would say this is my biggest win, this was my most reputable opponent I fought so far,” Spencer said. “Every fight you learn more and more. I think this fight taught me to be more composed in later fights. This was my first 10-rounder. I felt I could have even done more. I felt I needed to pace myself. At the end of the fight, I wasn’t even breathing hard.”

    The first few rounds, Spencer was trying to find his range. In the second, he showed some defensive chops, ducking under a four-punch flurry and midway through the second, Spencer dropped a left to the body.

    Spencer was very patient, choosing his spots, picking at Salgado, who was outpunched 26-14 through the first three rounds.

    “My jab and my counters, and he knew he had to watch for my counters,” Spencer said. “He throws shots hard and they come off strong. But they’re too wide. My shots were direct. It was a fight between two counter punches and my shots were shorter.”

    Through six, Spencer looked firmly in command. Salgado, realizing he was severely behind, began picking up his pace in the seventh round, landing a few shots to Spencer’s body and face.

    But Spencer responded well.

    At the outset of the ninth, feeling the urgency of his situation, Salgado attacked Spencer against the ropes with his best combination of the fight, to that point. By the middle of the round, Spencer came charging back, attacking with continuous right hands to the head.

    Jason Spencer, Joey’s father and trainer, told his father to stay with the game plan and stick to the right hands. It’s exactly what Joey did to close out Salgado.

    “I kept disguising my right hand behind my shoulder, staying low, and he didn’t see it at all,” Spencer said. “He didn’t know whether a hook, a jab, or my right would come. It’s a credit to my conditioning and all of the hard work coming in.”

    Ra’eese Aleem dominates Mike Plania in 10

    Ra’eese Aleem (20-0 (12 KOs) continues to prove he’s deserving of a title shot, as the 32-year-old super bantamweight rolled over solid Mike Plania (26-2, 13 KOs) with a unanimous 10-round decision in the FS1 PBC main event.

    The fight featured a second-round knockdown by Aleem, who caught Plania in the early portion of that round with a right. Plania stumbled back to the ropes, and tried to catch his balance when his glove touched the canvas. Referee Ray Corona ruled it a knockdown.

    “The fight was everything that I expected,” Aleem said. “He’s a very tough fighter and a great competitor. I just wanted to fight a smart fight, because we know he’s dangerous. Although I didn’t feel his power, I know that he can hit. I just wanted to take my time and let everything fall into place.

    “My defense was on another level and my offense was also strong. I kept my poise and took my time. I’m that type of fighter where I don’t care if it’s the first round or the last round or if I’m up on the cards. I want to stop you. I want to get you out of there. It was probably around the seventh round where I tried to turn up the volume, but I didn’t want to take any unnecessary chances.”

    What set it off was the second round.

    “I caught him slipping in round two,” Aleem said. “I could have jumped on him then, but I wanted to show growth as a fighter and keep taking my time.”

    And then, it was time for Aleem to call out his target—WBC/WBO super bantamweight world champion Stephen Fulton Jr.

    “It’s time for ‘Scared Boy’ Stephen Fulton Jr. to come out of hiding and sign the contract,” Aleem said. “Let’s get in there so I can give him his first loss. It would be a closer fight than tonight, but I still expect to dominate and get the win.”

    Super bantamweight Anthony Garnica (10-0-1, 5 KOs) remained undefeated with a six-round majority-decision over Juan Lopez (17-11, 7 KOs), while former IBF heavyweight world champion Charles Martin (29-3-1, 26 KOs) stopped Devin Vargas (22-8, 9 KOs) at 1:59 in the fourth round of a scheduled eight-rounder.





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  • Is Xander Zayas The Next Big Thing In Puerto Rican Boxing?

    Is Xander Zayas The Next Big Thing In Puerto Rican Boxing?



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  • A BIG KO! Callum Smith FOLDED opponent, Mathieu Bauderlique! 👊

    A BIG KO! Callum Smith FOLDED opponent, Mathieu Bauderlique! 👊



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  • BIG NEWS coming your way very soon 👀 #shorts

    BIG NEWS coming your way very soon 👀 #shorts



    #shorts

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  • September has always been month of big battles  – World Boxing Association

    September has always been month of big battles  – World Boxing Association


    On September 17, Mexico’s Saul “Canelo” Alvarez and Kazakhstan’s Gennady Golovkin, GGG, will meet in what will complete the trilogy of bouts between them, an attractive bout long expected by the world’s fans in which the World Boxing Association (WBA), WBC, IBF and WBO belts will be at stake, and that will define who is the best of two of the most notable fighters of the moment, with the Aztec in advantage of a victory achieved after the draw in the first fight.

    On a future occasion, we will approach in greater detail our personal point of view about what could happen in that third fight, scheduled for the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    For the time being, we believe this is a good opportunity to bring to mind three other memorable fights featured by six (6) brilliant and notable stars, all of them recorded in the history of boxing and all six in the International Hall of Fame of Canastota, NY, whose fights also took place in September 99, 41 and 40 years ago.

    These matches had these stars as protagonists: the first one between the American Jack Dempsey and the Argentine Luis Angel Firpo on 9/14/1923 for the heavyweight belt; Ray “Sugar” Leonard against the lethal puncher Thomas “Hit Man” Hearns, for the WBA and WBC  belt in possession of the former, in 1981; and the third, on the 9/9/1982 between super lightweight world champion Aaron “The Hawk” Pryor and Nicaraguan Alexis Arguello, who was seeking revenge on the man who had defeated him by technical knockout in the 14th round during the first clash in Miami a year earlier in what many consider the best fight in history at 140 pounds. 

    FIRPO WAS A LITTLE BIT SHORT

    The fight between Dempsey-an idol without equal by then in the eyes of his countrymen-and challenger Firpo (aka “El Toro Salvaje de La Pampa”), the first Latin American to seek the heavyweight crown, was staged at the Polo Grounds in New York. Seconds after the first bell Firpo knocked the champion down with a powerful and seemingly withering right hand, but Manassa’s “Magullador” got up and after receiving the protective count attacked the challenger to knock him down up to 7 times. Still dizzy Firpo went on a valiant and tenacious offensive, topped off with a hard right hand that knocked the monarch out of the ring, who landed on a reporter and a typewriter. Dempsey climbed precariously into the ring, assisted by reporters and referee Jack Gallagher, in violation of the Marquis of Queensberry rules, established at the end of the 19th century. It has been assured that Dempsey remained between 14 and 17 seconds out of the ring, which in fact made him the loser by KOT. As soon as the action of the second round began Dempsey knocked Firpo down 4 times. Gallagher, not without some reprehensible haste, decreed the knockout at 57 seconds.

    LEONARD CAME BACK

    The collision between Leonard and Hearns had a full house at the renowned Cesar Palace Hotel in Las Vegas in a fight that put “Sugar” Leonard in defense of the WBC and WBO welterweight crowns against the feared puncher that was “Hit Man”, who took the first five chapters supported by his persistent and fast jab and even when in the following rounds Leonard discounted, the challenger was ahead when they went to the center of the ring to cover the penultimate chapter, the 14th (by the time it was 15). In that round Leonard unleashed a two-handed offensive and with Hearns totally helpless and wobbling the referee stopped the action at 1’45”.

    AARON DEMOLISHED “EL FLACO”.

    On 12/11/82 at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Aaron Pryor had knocked out in 14 to the Nicaraguan Alexis Arguello, who was going for his fourth crown after reigning in feather, super feather and lightweight. Pryor finished him in 14 in one of the best fights of all time at super lightweight. The rematch took place on 9/9/83 at the Caesar’s Palace open-air hall. But “El Flaco Explosivo” was again crushed by “El Halcón”, WBA king, in 10 rounds, in a resounding demonstration of superiority. He knocked him down in the first, in the fourth and in the tenth at 1’48”, when referee Richard Steele stopped it.




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  • BIG DIG ENERGY! 💪 | TOMMY 'NORFOLK NIGHTMARE' FLETCHER SHOWS HUGE POWER IN PROFESSIONAL DEBUT 💥

    BIG DIG ENERGY! 💪 | TOMMY 'NORFOLK NIGHTMARE' FLETCHER SHOWS HUGE POWER IN PROFESSIONAL DEBUT 💥



    Mark Tibbs trained cruiserweight sensation Tommy Fletcher demonstrated huge power in his professional debut live on BT Sport. This ringside angle demonstrates the explosiveness presented by the man they call the ‘Norfolk Nightmare’.

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  • Gervonta Davis vs. Rolando Romero: Big Bang Theory

    Gervonta Davis vs. Rolando Romero: Big Bang Theory


    Fireworks are expected when two undefeated hard-hitters square off as five-time world champion Gervonta “Tank” Davis puts his WBA World Lightweight Title on the line against top contender Rolando “Rolly” Romero Saturday night on SHOWTIME pay-per-view.

    This Saturday, May 28, live from Barclays Center in Brooklyn, atop a Premier Boxing Champions event, five-time world champ Gervonta “Tank” Davis (26-0, 24 KOs) takes on hard-throwing, number-one contender Rolando “Rolly” Romero (14-0, 12 KOs) in a lightweight world title clash.

    The SHOWTIME pay-per-view telecast (9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT) also features two-division world champion Erislandy Lara defending his WBA Middleweight Title against Irish battler Gary “Spike” O’Sullivan in the co-main event.

    Also on the card, undefeated rising star Jesús “Mono” Ramos takes on the always-tough Luke Santamaría in a 10-round super welterweight showdown. In the pay-per-view opener, hard-hitting contender Eduardo Ramírez faces Puerto Rico’s Luis Meléndez in a 10-round super featherweight war.

    The Story

    Davis is returning to Barclays Center, where he won his first world title in 2017 on the James DeGale-Badou Jack undercard. Now firmly established as a headliner and one of the biggest attractions in the sport, he’s coming back to Brooklyn in a true bad-blood grudge match.

    The 27-year-old Davis has spent the last several years building his star and fortifying his resume. Now a five-time, three-division world champ headlining his fourth straight pay-per-view, the Baltimore native has made his mark as not only a pound-for-pound talent, but also one of boxing’s top draws. 

    In 2021, he scored a unanimous decision victory over hard-charging Mexican warrior Isaac Cruz in a December defense of his lightweight title and, before that, stopped junior welterweight titlist Mario Barrios in the eleventh round. 

    Now set to fight the WBA’s no. 1 contender and mandatory challenger, he looks to dominate and move on to even bigger things. 

    “Rolly” Romero was supposed to have the Isaac Cruz slot in December. Sexual assault allegations, however, saw that opportunity of a lifetime pulled from his grasp when he was removed from that pay-per-view main event. 

    Five months later, with no charges filed, the 26-year-old Las Vegas native is back and confident in his ability to take full advantage of this high-profile shot.

    Romero started boxing at 16 and, despite the late start in the sport, was discovered and eventually signed by Floyd Mayweather after some brutally dominant sparring performances at the Mayweather Boxing Club. 

    The hard-swinging lightweight captured the interim WBA lightweight title via close unanimous decision over Jackson Marinez in 2020 and is 2-0 with two knockouts since then. 

    The Stakes

    At stake is Davis’ WBA lightweight world title. Davis is also looking to affirm his spot atop the deep and lucrative 135-pound division while Romero wants to make his case for entry into the elite class.

    The Matchup

    Blessed with speed, high-end reflexes, and heavy hands, the just-over five-foot-five Gervonta Davis’ ability to generate concussive power from his low center of gravity makes him one of the most all-around explosive fighters in the sport today.

    Aside from his physical tools, the southpaw has an often overlooked degree of savvy when it comes to using angles and complex ring strategies.

    On defense, Davis uses his speed and reflexes, as well as his small stature, to avoid shots and roll underneath punches. The threat of heavy-handed counters also keeps opposition tentative.

    “ I hit him with one of these and I’m going to knock his whole nose off. ”
    Undefeated WBA World Lightweight World Champion – Gervonta “Tank” Davis

    Romero fights like he talks—with bluster, blister, and supreme confidence. Sporting an angry, tense ring demeanor, Showtime commentator Mauro Ranallo once observed that he looked like “a walking clenched fist.” 

    Naturally heavy-handed, he comes forward, looking to do damage with every bit of contact made. Once burdened with numerous technical flaws, he’s fine-tuned his skill set in recent performances and has done a better job of varying his punches and using the jab to set up his power shots. His biggest weapons remain a clubbing right hand and an awkward lead left hook.

    Defensively, Romero still has exploitable weaknesses. He keeps his chin up and head high in exchanges, making him vulnerable to taking flush counters. He also has a tendency to lunge with his jabs.

    The Words

    Gervonta Davis

    “We know what we’re coming here to do on May 28. He’s just worrying about power, he’s not working on anything else. Their only plan is to knock me out. I hit him with one of these and I’m going to knock his whole nose off. They just keep talking about knockouts and trying to get me out of there early, because they know he can’t last down the line.”

    Rolando Romero

    “This is going to be the easiest fight of my career…Gervonta keeps talking about these skills he has, but I just see his face getting swollen up after every fight he has. He just bullies smaller opponents. He’s not that special. We’re ending his little reign and he can go retire. Gervonta Davis is ending up on the canvas knocked out. That’s what I can guarantee.”

    The Breakdown

    There’s no doubt that Gervonta Davis has the more refined skill set and deeper resume of the two. On paper, that gives the defending champ a significant edge coming into this bout.

    Power, however, can be a great equalizer in any fight and Romero has the pop to hurt anyone he catches. 

    The difficulty Davis had with an awkward, free-swinging, come-forward Isaac Cruz suggests that Romero, who is as aggressive and stylistically off-putting as the Mexican, but also bigger and heavier-handed, might have a legit shot in boxing’s theater of the unexpected. Davis says that he was hampered in the Cruz fight by a hand injury, though. So, it remains to be seen whether his troubles were injury-based or style-based.

    Look for Davis to work angles against a Romero whose aggression sometimes pulls him off balance and makes him vulnerable to counters. Romero will do what he does, trying to clip Davis with something heavy and pounce on his opportunity. Given the styles, mindsets, and abilities of the two fighters—who’ve yet to even suffer a knockdown in their pro careers– a knockout is pretty much the only possible result of this contest. 

    Davis vs. Romero is going to be a good, high-impact grudge match with a guaranteed “big bang” ending. 

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